Dear all,
Even if he is not an economist, Francis Galton,
the founding father of eugenics, considered SOME
children as public goods and justified that the
cost of their production and maintenance should
be beared by the local or national community.
"Many cases in which individuals and states have
portioned girls may be found in Malthus. It is
therefore far from improbable that if the merits
of good race became widely recognised and its
indications were rendered more surely
intelligible than they now are, that local
endowments, and perhaps adoptions, might be made
in favour of those of both sexes who showed
evidences of high race and of belonging to
prolific and thriving families. (...) It is
better economy, in the long run, to use the best
mares as breeders than as workers, the loss
through their withdrawal from active service
being more than recouped in the next generation
through what is gained by their progeny."
[/Inquiries into Human Faculty and Its
Development/, 1883, pp.328-329] The final purpose
being, in Galton's mind, the preservation and
improvement of the English race (the race being itself a public good).
He later wrote in a similar way that the whole
society should show "respect to the parents of
noteworthy children, which the contributors of
such valuable assets to the national wealth
richly deserve." [/Essays on Eugenics/, 1909,
p.41] On the contrary, Galton considered the
children of "criminals" and "gipsy-like" people as public bads.
Stressing the importance of selection, he talked
through and through about the “quality of
parentages”, the cost of children (and immigrants
too) and the “the productivity” of a marriage
(that is, its number of children) in a way Gary
Becker wouldn't repudiate, he who wrote about the
“production of children”, the “value of
children”, the “cost of child quality”, and who
proudly called them “commodities”.
This reference to eugenics may sound unsuitable.
It shouldn't. For treating children as public
goods shall naturally call for plans to produce,
distribute, maintain, and use them in the most
efficient way (most efficient from a general
point of view, and not only from the parents’ one).
Not so far from Galton, what made children public
goods in the eyes of the physiologists was their
future “social productivity”. This is how they
justified public schools, medical care for
children and mothers' education. (Querton wrote
for instance: “L’école peut exercer une influence
considérable sur la productivité sociale, en
assurant le développement et le perfectionnement
des différents rouages de la machine humaine.”
[QUERTON Louis, /L'Augmentation du rendement de
la machine humaine/, 1905, p.112])
From the 30s and the 40s, children won't be
considered as public goods only in their quality
of producers to be, but also as consumers.
"Potential consumers, advocated an advertising in
the 40s, are also reached by this all inclusive
medium (the outdoor advertising billboards). As
purchase influencers, Chicago 750,000 school
children represent an active group of great
value." [General Outdoor Advertising Company, "To
Market to Market", 1942] Economic growth
replacing, in both cases, Galton's race improvement.
It is a bit simplistic to put it this way, but I
think it points out to some issues of what's at
stake behind this question of children as public goods.
Thibault Le Texier
|